Example sentences of "[noun] from which you can [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 Here are some medically recommended guidelines from which you can plan your own menus :
2 Elsewhere there are Breughels ; walls covered with Delft tiles ; a medieval belfry with 366 steps from which you can gaze down on the town 's steep , red tiled roofs ; holy blood brought back from the crusades .
3 I found the following equation from which you can determine the frequency ( pulses per second ) .
4 There is an unlimited number of ideas from which you can choose to back your picture , using any fabric from a dainty piece of real silk through tweeds , rough and raw silks and linens , to hessians , velvets , cottons and even several layers or pieces of different materials .
5 Careful searching through old junk shops and around antique markets may well produce endless ideas and inspiration from which you can work .
6 Each account offers a full current service with credit interest plus a range of other features including a readymade Reserve from which you can borrow at any time .
7 Other people can often offer good ideas or may have useful experience from which you can benefit .
8 For example , there may be restrictions on the catchment area from which you can expect to recruit , or particular requirements in terms of communication about the vacancy .
9 Camp on one hole one day , or in an area from which you can see several holes .
10 You can also take the train : a mini-train , billed as Europe 's highest small railway ( it could just as well be smallest high railway ) , which coils for no less than ten very lofty , lonely kilometres around the spurs of rock to a distant terminus from which you can walk to the Lac d'Artouste , nearly 200 acres of it , in a stonily unforgiving ring of granite mountains .
11 ‘ Contrary to what your mother may have told you , the de Rochefort family is no longer a well from which you can draw money like water . ’
12 It has a massive 90 foot tower from which you can see across Orford and the seashore nearby .
13 When an idiom is just something that has the form of , has a certain apparent grammatical form but actually occurs just as a single unit of a fixed meaning , so it has no genuine semantic structure from which you can determine its meaning , for example kick the bucket means die and you do n't get that in the meaning of kick the bucket .
14 Further , I believe that you can choose any job , identify the people who perform best at it and show that , if you go back over their lives and careers , you will find themes , patterns and trends from which you can develop a selection interview designed to find more of them .
15 Using these newly acquired turning skills the board can be lined up into the secure position from which you can start sailing .
16 You must always stand so that you face the opponent because this is the position from which you can launch the maximum number of powerful attacks and place your opponent at a disadvantage .
17 It achieves this by being a quick survey and appraisal of the history book and by immediately establishing a perspective from which you can view the book .
18 There is an integral garage from which you can gain direct access to the cellar .
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